Society's Child
Spacey, 61, will play a police officer investigating the case of a man - played by the director, Franco Nero - who can draw people by listening to their voices, despite not being able to see and is wrongly accused of sexually abusing children.
"I'm very happy Kevin agreed to participate in my film," Nero told ABC News. "I consider him a great actor and I can't wait to start the movie." The film will also feature Nero's wife, Vanessa Redgrave, who will play the accused man's piano teacher.
Spacey has been little seen on either big or small screen since 2017 when more than 20 men alleged sexual misconduct by the actor when he was working at the Old Vic in London between 1995 and 2013. Spacey denies all accusations of misconduct.
He was dropped from Netflix's House of Cards series and his scenes in Ridley Scott's All the Money in the World were hastily reshot with Christopher Plummer, who won an Oscar nomination for his work.
A State Council committee led by Vice Premier Liu He announced the crackdown late on Friday as part of efforts to fend off financial risks. It was the first time China's cabinet has targeted virtual currency mining, a sizable business in the world's second-biggest economy that some estimates say accounts for as much as 70% of the global crypto supply.
Cryptocurrency exchange Huobi on Monday suspended both crypto-mining and some trading services to new clients from mainland China, adding it will instead focus on overseas businesses.
Comment: A recent article about China's ban on financial institutions speculating on cryptocurrencies made both its position and the reasons why quite clear:
"Recently, crypto currency prices have skyrocketed and plummeted, and speculative trading of cryptocurrency has rebounded, seriously infringing on the safety of people's property and disrupting the normal economic and financial order," they said in the statement.If, as the article claims, China accounts for as much as 70% of the global crypto supply, then China is more exposed than any other country to any detrimental fluctuations and manipulations. And so if it wants to protect it's economy from a potentially devastating event like the 2007/8 economic crash, that was also largely based on fraud, manipulation and speculation, then it needs to take this kind of action, otherwise it's highly like that nefarious actors will use that vulnerability to their advantage, against China:
[...]
virtual currencies "are not supported by real value" and their prices are easily manipulated [...]
- US-China confrontation may only get worse under Biden as West's sanctions force Beijing into 'war mode'
- John Pilger: The Coming War on China
- In 1958 US considered nuclear strike on China over Taiwan, classified docs show
Rakesh and Dakshina, from Madurai, India were desperate to tie the knot but with lockdown restrictions and social distancing measures in place, so came up with an alternative plan for their big day.
The pair had their ceremony onboard a flight from Madurai to Bangalore on Sunday.
The flight took off from Madurai International Airport at 7am, despite the guest list far exceeding the state government's stipulated 50 people for such gatherings.
Video footage shows the flight absolutely packed to the brim with guests as the couple stand at the front of the aisle and exchange their vows.
As cases, hospitalizations and deaths steadily dropped this week, pre-pandemic life in America has largely resumed. Hugs and unmasked crowds returned to the White House, a Mardi Gras-style parade marched through Alabama's port city of Mobile, and even states that have stuck to pandemic-related restrictions readied to drop them. However, health experts also cautioned that not enough Americans have been vaccinated to completely extinguish the virus, leaving the potential for new variants that could extend the pandemic.
As the seven-day average for new cases dropped below 30,000 per day this week, Rochelle Walensky, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, pointed out cases have not been this low since June 18, 2020. The average number of deaths over the last seven days also dropped to 552 — a rate not seen since July last year. It's a dramatic drop since the pandemic hit a devastating crescendo in January.
"As each week passes and as we continue to see progress, these data give me hope," Walensky said Friday at a news conference.
Despite a resume that includes 55 games of experience as an NFL offensive tackle - the first Asian American first-round draft pick in history - and 10 seasons as an assistant coach under Super Bowl winners Andy Reid and Doug Pederson, Chung was turned away.
"It was said to me, 'Well, you're really not a minority," Chung told The Boston Globe.
Chung is Korean, as are both of his parents. Chung said:
"I was like, 'Wait a minute. The last time I checked, when I looked in the mirror and brushed my teeth, I was a minority. So I was like, 'What do you mean I'm not a minority?' "The 51-year-old Chung did not name the team or the interviewer in the report, but he said he was told, "You are not the right minority we're looking for."
The Wall Street Journal, which cited current and former US officials, reported that the intelligence gathered by "an international partner" expands on a State Department document confirming that workers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology fell ill with symptoms "consistent with both Covid-19 and common seasonal illness" in fall 2019.
The officials were split on the strength of the intelligence, with one telling the Journal it needed more corroboration and another saying it was "of exquisite quality" and "very precise." Both said the intelligence stopped short of confirming the researchers had contracted coronavirus.
Comment: The presumed Patient Zero of the coronavirus outbreak appears to be still missing. From the New Zealand Herald
The fate of a Chinese researcher believed to be the world's first Covid-19 patient remains a mystery despite a year-long search by Western intelligence officials investigating the origins of the pandemic.
Huang Yanling, who worked at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, was one of scores of doctors, scientists, activists and journalists who disappeared during the Chinese Communist Party's suspected cover-up.
During the early weeks of the outbreak last February, rumours swirled on Chinese social media that the graduate student was "patient zero", creating a direct link between the controversial lab and the virus outbreak. Chinese officials quickly stepped in to censor the reports from the internet.
The Wuhan Institute of Virology denied she was patient zero and insisted, without evidence, that she was alive and well elsewhere in the country - while scrubbing her biography and image from its website.
A post purporting to be from Huang later appeared on social media platform WeChat.
"To my teachers and fellow students, how long no speak," the message said. "I am Huang Yanling, still alive. If you receive any email (regarding the Covid-19 rumour), please say it's not true."
Her former boss made a separate post on social media claiming that she had left the institute in 2015, while a Chinese news agency claimed that it had spoken with her new employer but provided no other details.
A grainy photo of the young woman in her 20s with long hair seen peering out from behind a colleague - salvaged from the website and circulated online - is the only known photo of Huang.
According to the UK's Mail on Sunday, which has also attempted unsuccessfully to track her down, little else is known about her other than that her name is included among the authors of three scientific papers issued by the institute between 2013 and 2015.
The Mail on Sunday says Western governments and intelligence agencies have tried and failed to track down Huang, sparking fears she is either dead or being detained by Chinese authorities.
Huang's disappearance had earlier been cited in a 15-page dossier prepared by Western governments - published by The Sunday Telegraph in May last year - laying out evidence the virus had escaped from the lab. The Mail on Sunday says its own extensive inquiries within China, including messages to her former colleagues, have also turned up empty.
Despite China's internet censors stamping out discussion of Huang, many social media users continue to speculate about her fate, with some claiming she may have been hastily cremated.
"Everyone on the Chinese internet is searching for Huang," one blogger wrote, according to the Mail on Sunday. "Most believe she is dead."
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told the Mail on Sunday in a statement that the Chinese Communist Party had prevented investigators from interviewing researchers from the Wuhan Institute of Virology "including those who were ill in the fall (autumn) of 2019".
"Beijing continues today to withhold vital information that scientists need to protect the world from this deadly virus and the next one," Pompeo said.
It comes as US officials step up their attacks on China over the pandemic, claiming they have explosive new evidence that proves Covid-19 leaked from the lab.
Pompeo earlier demanded the World Health Organisation launch an investigation into the possibility the virus was result of an "accidental" lab leak. He said US intelligence agencies had found scientists at the Wuhan Institute of Virology fell ill in the autumn of 2019 with symptoms consistent with Covid-19, earlier than previously believed.
"This raises questions about the credibility of WIV senior researcher Shi Zhengli's public claim that there was 'zero infection' among WIV's staff and students of SARS-CoV-2 or SARS-related viruses," Pompeo said.
The first cluster of cases was discovered in December 2019 in Wuhan, with early reports linking the outbreak to a controversial "wet market" that sold and butchered exotic animals in disgusting conditions.
The "patient zero" of the Huanan market had previously been named as a 57-year-old seafood merchant, a woman named Wei Guixian, who first started to feel sick on December 10.
On Thursday, the WHO's team of experts arrived in Wuhan to begin their investigation into the origins of the virus, which has now killed more than two million people globally.
"We need to be very careful about the use of the phrase 'patient zero' which many people indicate as the first initial case," Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO's Covid-19 technical lead, told a press conference.
"We may never find who the patient zero was."
Western governments believe that the body has largely ceded control of the investigation to China, leading to fears of a whitewash.
"Unfortunately, this has become a political investigation," Singapore-based Australian virologist Wang Linfa told The New York Times in November. "Whatever they do is symbolic."
The gruesome discovery was made by a father and son who were playing around the large beat-up dinosaur statue, located in the southeastern Barcelona suburb of Santa Coloma de Gramenet. According to local media reports, the father noticed a foul smell - and saw a dead body through a crack in the statue, immediately notifying the authorities.
Footage from the scene shows firefighters cutting open the prop to retrieve the body. The dead person turned out to be a local 39-year-old man, who had been reported missing by his family.
It remains unclear how the man managed to get inside the statue. The dinosaur prop appears to be quite beat up - missing its lower jaw and having a penis spray-painted on its side - yet it had not had any visible openings large enough to get in before the accident.
As it isn't far from home, I feel an urge to visit the London suburb where a local council has permanently painted a pedestrian crossing blue, pink and white to mark the international day against homophobia, transphobia and biphobia. When I find the crossing, I'll stand in the middle, ignore the busy traffic and wait for a lorry or dump truck to put me out of my misery.
Then I will be free of this nonsense. The sort of loony, left-leaning liberal virtue-signaling that chooses to waste taxpayers' money on cozying up to gender fascists. I'll no longer be able to roll my eyeballs - they'll be somewhere on the nearby pavement - at Google choosing to censor my docs (like the one I wrote this article on) by offering me pop-up messages suggesting I use the more 'inclusive' term of 'chairperson' should I ever type the word 'chairman'. Chairman. Chairman. Chairper... See how it works?
Comment: Apparently the devil is in 'the definition', not 'the details'.
Nunez is being held in the San Joaquin County Jail, and bail has been set at $2 million. His first court date is set for Tuesday, where he will answer to the serious charges of sexual abuse of a minor.
Nunez is the founder of a not-for-profit org called "Fathers and Families of San Joaquin", and recently has been involved with helping families who have lost members to the novel coronavirus with funeral expenses.
However, the non-profit has issued a statement saying that Nunez is no longer involved with them in any way, and that they are committed to their original mission independent of him.

A vandalized Arab restaurant after clashes in the Israeli town of Bat Yam on May 12.
The victim, Saeed Mousa, was assaulted by a mob in the town of Bat Yam on May 12 as an exchange of strikes between the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the Gaza-based armed group Hamas provoked a wave of violent Jewish-Palestinian clashes inside Israel.
Mousa was dragged out of his car and harshly beaten with flagpoles and even an electric scooter in a shocking attack broadcast on live TV. The Israeli-Arab was taken to hospital in serious condition, but has reportedly improved.
Comment: The cycle of violence continues:
Israeli police said in a tweet on Monday that a terrorist arrived at a rail station, pulled out a knife and wounded two people. "Police officers who were on the scene responded quickly, fired at the attacker - and neutralized him," the post reads.
The assailant injured two men in their 20s during the attack, one seriously and one moderately, according to Israel's Magen David Adom ambulance service.
A widely circulated video appears to show one of the victims wearing an Israeli military uniform. In the graphic video, the man can be seen kneeling with a knife in his back while medics treat him.
The incident took place near the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem, where the possible eviction of Palestinian families was a flashpoint for mass protests that sparked the 11-day war between Israel and Gaza militants.
Images published by Reuters appear to show the assailant motionless on the side of the road while surrounded by medics and security personnel. Israeli security forces have been deployed to the area and can be seen standing on guard.
A ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, mediated by Egypt, has held for four days but tensions remain high in East Jerusalem. On Friday, violent clashes erupted at Al-Aqsa mosque, just hours after the ceasefire was agreed.

















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